tv CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield CNN August 23, 2020 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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his sister speaks on the eve of the republican convention. we are hearing stunning audio recordings of marion trump berry. >> god gave me and -- oh my god. but you know it is the change of stories, a lack of preparation, the lying the holy [ bleep ]. >> state of emergency. more than a million acres burned by out of control wildfires in california. and conditions are about to get worse. and covid on campus, coronavirus cases mount as colleges across the country. how students and parents are responding.
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hello, everyone. thank you so much for joining me. we start with breaking news on two major storms posing a significant threat to the gulf coast. the first one expected to make land fall, marco, strengthening into a category 1 hurricane. it is barrelling toward the louisiana coast with a direct hit likely tomorrow and just days latter another hurricane is expected to slam into that very state. cnn meteorologist tom sater is tracking the latest developments for us. you got an update moments ago. >> marco is still a hurricane, a category 1, laura is a tropical storm and expected to possibly make landfall within 48 hours. behind marco and be stronger. who had this on the 2020 bingo card? we'll start with marco and it will be making landfall first. when we look at this, 280 miles
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south/southeast of the mouth of the mississippi. it is a category 1, and as it makes the way to land, late tomorrow afternoon we could see southeast louisiana parishes easily have winds hurricane strength, 74, 75, 76 maybe strong ler. bright red are hurricane warnings and watches to the east. we will have ahead for when laura approaches but let's break this down. 4 to 6-foot storm surge. devastating the east coast with over 3.3 million losing power weeks ago and the same surge but the low-lying ground to hit very hard. half a million people without power in dominican republic and massive landslides. this storm laura doesn't care about mountains and even though warnings for cuba ready for
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eastern cuba, this is going to knock out power to possibly hundreds of thousands if not more and within 48 hours to make landfall more to the west of marco. however, there are some cities and communities within both of the cones of uncertainty. marco where it is now, look at laura. laura will be close to the position marco is now and as it moves to the north and those warnings westward, see how they overlap. lafayette, louisiana. lake charles. both in both cones. this is a big deal here. but again it is late tomorrow afternoon for marco, category 1 and with laura pretty much as we get into wednesday evening. with that western track of laura it could keep it in these warmer waters longer and expected to be category 2, possibly higher than that.
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massive rainfall for southern southeast louisiana, coastal areas, of course. that's just with marco. unbelievable timing with this. what do you expect in this year? >> that is true. that part of the country is familiar with hurricane season and not two within a couple days of each other. >> also i should say this is the 15th anniversary of katrina this week. >> i was thinking the same thing. we are following this closely. thank you so much, tom. cnn's martin savidge is in new orleans for us. the storm is headed towards where you are. the 15th anniversary of katrina. how are officials there preparring? >> reporter: i was in new orleans in katrina and we know what the city could face. the problem with this storm is not the fact that it's one storm, it is two. and that's considered unprecedented. officials say either one manageable by safety measures of
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what they have in place with flood protection systems. but bring these two systems on the same path coming in just 48 hours, 1 after the other, unprecedented and don't know what to exact. the governor talking about that a short while ago as in mindset and with the supplies. >> these storms are not to be taken lightly, especially because there are two of them. the second storm comes in so close there may not be much of a window when we can fly search and rescue helicopters, when we can get out with high water vehicles. >> reporter: so that's the problem, water is always the concern and in a place like new orleans and the coastal areas of louisiana and you will have marco coming in first. it dumps rain and a storm surge. the good news is the mississippi river is lower than usual so it
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should be able to accept both the storm surge and the amount of rain. you won't get flooding from the m mississip mississippi river but then laura comes in and did the city, the area have enough time to drain in the interim? that's what the governor was talking about. the power is most definitely going to go out. there will be flooding. will the puffers be able to keep up and drain it away before the next storm comes in? that's why this is so unpredictable. >> flooding a huge concern and also evacuations in the midst of a pandemic, as well. you will continue to follow this story for us closely. thank you so much. now to the white house where president trump is dealing with an unexpected family scandal. yet another one. one day before the start of the republican national convention and hearing recordings of marion
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trump barry unloading on her brother and the tapes secretly recorded by the president's niece mary trump and just wrote a scathing book on the president. cnn's jeremy diamond at the white house and this drama could not have come at a worst time as the president is trying to make the case for re-election within just hours. >> reporter: that's right. over the last week we have heard that the democratic national convention democrats as well as some republicans making the case that president trump is unfit for office, trying to put character on the ballot and contrasting president trump with joe biden. frankly, these remarks secretly recorded of the president's sister could have fit nicely in that democratic national con venlgs and describes the president as someone with cruel, no principles, a liar and a phony and also goes after the president in a private conversation with her niece for him trying to take credit for her own success. listen. >> donald's out for donald.
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period. >> when he said he started to say something to me, well, look at what i've done for you, and i said, you have done nothing. deliberately. i have never asked him for a favor. since 1981 when i was being highly considered to go in the federal court. on my own merit. >> reporter: maryanne trump barry asked for a call to secure the nomination and said she would have gotten it but the president held this over her head for years and the president responded saying every day it's something else, who cares? he also noted that i miss my brother robert trump who recently passed an i way and i'll continue to work hard for the american people. not everyone agrees but the results are obvious. our country will soon be
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stronger than ever before. the president will have an opportunity to rebut these allegations about his character. the president's children are expected to be on full display with speaking slots at the republican national convention over the coming week. >> all right. jeremy diamond, thank you so much. joining me is brandon buck, a former top aide and harryset miller. welcome both of you on this busy sunday morning. the president has been able to brush off damning attacks from those within his orbit before colluding his niece and what impact do the recordings have given that it's happening on the eve of the republican convention that they all seem to reinforce the description of the democrats lobbed at him in their convention last week? >> it is a terrible distraction right before the convention. i'm sure that's not a
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coincidence but i don't know how many minds will be changed by this. i think we need to realize there's a misperception that something they don't understand who he really is and somehow someone just reveals to them his true character they'll change their mind. republican voters that support him know he's a liar, he's a bit of a huckster and think that he's their huckster. how many times have we said this is the moment when people will move away from him? it won't happen. republicans, people that support the president and have justified this, they have -- whether it's because it upsets the media or the democrats or what they get for it in congress, i don't think it changes minds and not what he wants going into an election but will change the subject very quickly. >> what do you make of the president's response? who cares? i miss my brother. >> i think he's doing a good job of not taking the bait. i'm sure that democrats would
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love to have this be the conversation. i don't know what the situation is with his sister. i can't imagine he wants to attack her. this is the most disciplined from the president. usually he swings. it's notable he is not doing that here and wants this week about him. he will have a press conference before his convention. he's making this whole week about him and wants it to be his message. >> so, tara, we'll see if there's follow-up statements from the president but his sister attacked his character and listen what she said about how he got into college. >> i mean, i didn't get him in but i know he didn't get into college and he went to fordham for one year and then he got into university of pennsylvania. i guess he had somebody do it, take the exams. >> no way. he had someone take his entrance
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exams. >> s.a.t. whatever. >> oh jesus! >> that's what i believe. i even remember the name. >> oh man. >> this is a president who has constantly bragged about the scholastic achievement and okay raids and reports of mary in the book that someone took the s.a.t.s for him. democrats went after his character in 2016. people seem to know who they're dealing with. are democrats risking the election again if they focus on the characters of the president and joe biden? >> i don't think so. because there's a big, big difference between 2016 and 2020. actually two big differences. one hillary clinton is not on the ballot. joe biden is not hillary clinton. and two, there's a record now governing record failed record
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of donald trump with a body count of 175,000 dead americans and counting because of his failed leadership and response to covid-19. those are really big differences between 2016 and now and the character where character and empathy and compassion and competence come into play is a national emergency. which is what we're living through right now and it's presenting itself in multiple ways, whether it's the pandemic and the actual treatment and response to covid, the economic collapse as a result of that and then also the racial injustices and the rise in the american people over racial injustice after george floyd and the president's response to that. so the dynamics are very different. and when you're a stable genius you don't have to tell people that. the revelations on the mary trump tapes aren't surprising and what scares me and most frightening is the fact that so
quote
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many people, so many americans don't seem to care that donald trump is a sociopathic liar in the greatest position of power in the greatest country of the world driving our democracy into the ground in order for him to hold on to power. they should scare the bejesus about everybody but the fact they don't is alarming and the democrats need to make that message clear what's actually at stake with another four years of donald trump. >> on the subject of falsehoods, the president tweeted this morning attacking a mail-in voting yet again. this tweet calling mail drop boxes a disaster, potentially covid spreaders. twitter flagged it as misleading and misleading health claims to kiss suede people from voting. how long can republicans quietly disapprove of what the president is saying and reinforce and support the u.s. postal service
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and mail-in ballots as opposed to speaking out vocally? look. we are talking about the president's scholastic achievements, any student having broken code this many times would have been kicked out of school. what will republicans do about this? >> i don't think there's any way to look at what the president is doing right now honestly than setting the marker to dispute the election later. this is a pretext to say that the election was stolen from him. you have seen people like mitch mcconnell saying mail-in voting is safe and republican office holders across the country encouraging people to do mail-in voting. the president hasn't quite said what i think he's doing, but while they're maybe perhaps looking the other way they're telling people to vote by mail and understand the situation. i think that ultimately if this election comes down to president and loses and obvious i think republicans will, at least the ones in charge, maybe an
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mcconnell, cuts him loose quickly. i don't think they flirt with this nonsense about the election being stolen and setting us up for that and i think it's important for people to look at. >> in the meantime, he's got at least four days for a massive mega phone in the convention to spread the falsehoods ahead. brendan and tara, thank you so much. before president trump and vice president pence make their bid for four more years, join anderson cooper. the preview is live tonight at 8:00 eastern. coming up, state of emergency, out of control wildfires destroying more than 1 million acres of land is california. is there relief in sight? is the federal going enough to help? coronavirus is rapidly spreading at colleges across the country. i'll talk live with a former president of the university of south carolina for his views. joe biden reveals why he chose kamala harris as his
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in just a few hours president trump is set to announce what the white house describes as a major therapeutic break through for the battle against coronavirus. cnn's chief medical correspondent dr. gupta joins me on the phone with the new reporting. thank you so much for calling in. you have been talking to sources all day. what more have you learned about this announcement? >> right. so all we have heard erinitiall is this press conference with a therapeutic and we know that the therapeutic is known as convalescence serum and hearing that this will be an announcement of an emergency use authorization for the use of this convalescent serum. you may know that this type of serum basically is taking plasma from people who have recovered from coronavirus, the idea is
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that their blood and plasma will have antibodies in it and then can be used to treat people who are currently dealing with the idea. this is researched for sometime, it is a well-known type of therapy for other types of infections. but now we are hearing that the e ua will be for this particular type of treatment. >> we know that convalescent plasma is given to over 70,000 patients so how does this seum deliver from what we already know has transpired? >> yeah. this is really interesting. so you're absolutely right. under compassionate use, you know, guidelines and expanded use guide loolines tens of thous of people received this type of treatment. what the issue really is is trying to understand the data. you're giving this because there's some idea that it should work. it's worked for other
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infections. sort of makes sense that it should walk and the rhesitation has been and divisive in the community is you still have to trial this in a randomized way, meaning some people with similar sort of ill ens gness get the o therapy and others do not and see is it working. those are the randomized controlled trials which everyone knows the term now because there's the level of evidence that typically the fda wants before approving things. this is not an approval. this is an emergency use authorization but because of the enthusiasm i think around this tens of thousands of people have been receiving it but the trials have not been done in a way to give us data yet and that is really critical going forward. >> all right. sanjay gupta, not a day that goes by that you are not on call for us and for america. we appreciate you breaking that
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down for us. >> you got it. carolina university is one of the schools to move to online classes after discovering cases on campus. schools in at least 15 states report positive cases on campus putting plans to the test. joining me is harris pastetis. thanks so much for joining us. i read your essay that you wrote about how colleges and students should be handling coronavirus. talk about your views on clusters that we're now seeing pop up on campus and how alarmed you are, if at all. >> yep. of course. good to be with you. student behavior and fresh men in particular, they wait their whole lives as you would imagine to get to college and even though many will take pledges and commit to masking wearing and social isolation, it's very,
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very difficult given that their social lives and much of the academic life thrives on being close with people. i'm not suggesting they won't follow the rules but a minority of student that is do not. what you then worry about is as you mentioned a cluster, whether it starts in a classroom, in a residence hall, in a fraternity or sorority house and quickly spread so we are in a period now where we know within a week or two weeks whether many more campuses will be shutting down or whether we get over the hump. >> and the essay that you wrote was for "the atlanta journal constitution" and note that college students engage in risky behaviors. it has not transpired in a pandemic. do you trust that college students around the country can avoid parties and other risky social gatherings? do you think being called out as
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some university heads are doing publicly and suspending some of them is the right step? >> i do. i think when you see evidence of it, there are these videos you wake up on a weekend morning, sunday, monday and find out that people have been congregating, they have no recourse but to clamp down on them with a variety of penalties, of course. if the appeal is not going to work up front then you have to come down on them when they're caught doing that. there is no doubt that many, many students will comply and are complying. the problem with this covid pandemic is that it doesn't take too many people to create what's called a super cluster or a super spreading event so my fingers are crossed. i also think a big part of the control measures to involve students, student government leaders in concocting the
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educational and behavioral modification programs because we know that college students feel fairly not vulnerable to many things that you and i -- >> yeah. having these college monitors and jobs in positions of many college students didn't think they would have to be enforcing but here we are. you have also chaired the southeastern conference, one of the premier athletic conferences. the s.e.c. is one of a handful planning to play football. just a few weeks. while others have postponed all fall sports. is this the right move? >> three of the power five conferences are planning to play, have an abbreviated schedule, conference games only and it would be easier to change plans if you're only dealing with teams in your own conference. i think it's the right thing to
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do right now as long as there's other plans and our university at south carolina the stadium will be -- not be full, of course. i believe they plan to invite up to about 20,000 people, the stadium holds 80,000 people so you'll get the noise, the fans. but there will be separation there. by the way, it's the players who are petitioning to play, the players and families. they have worked so hard for this moment but, but you know, two major conferences have pulled the plug on the season and just like when bobby thompson was hero and bill buckner was a g.o.a.t. you never know which you are until after the game is played and said and done. >> i went to university of texas. they find themselves in a similar position. let's hope that they don't have to go to plan "d" or further down the list and have this under control and the players can play if they want to in a healthy environment.
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harris, thank you so much. >> thank you. take care. up next, a race against time in california, more than 600 wildfires burning out of control and the weather is only making matters worse. at morgan stanley, a global collective of thought leaders offers investors a broader view. ♪ we see companies protecting the bottom line by putting people first. we see a bright future, still hungry for the ingenuity of those ready for the next challenge. today, we are translating decades of experience into strategies for the road ahead. we are morgan stanley.
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clock, officials are worried are there's no end in sight. the forecast shows another round of thunderstorms and lightning for the state which could spark more spires. paul vercammen is in calistoga, california. how are the conditions there? >> reporter: they have improved a little bit but as you pointed out they're worried about the lightning strikes and there's a massive red flag warning in much of northern california and central california. i'm at the command post here. nervous residents here talking with firefighters trying to understand what roads are open, what the next moves might be. the townspeople appreciative for the work that the firefighters are doing but they did say on this fire the lnu complex they have lost 845 structures completely, 231 damaged. a show of appreciation over here.
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townspeople, chalk art thanking the firefighters. let me bring in rich cordova of cal fire because right now in a way you're on pins and needles to get the lightning strikes and the winds to whip up. >> 12,000 strikes last night and anticipating the same coming in. 40 to 50 miles per hour winds and extremely worried about this condition coming in. >> reporter: you get help from out of state. now hear 14,000 firefighters but the crews have to be exhausted. >> they're working long hours. we are here to mitigate the problem. we are bringing other crews from out of state and federal resources also with the military. >> reporter: interesting, this would normally be a larger fire camp but in the covid-19 era you don't want a bunch of guys and girls together. seen 200 people in a chow line in 10 minutes. you're taking the precautions. >> everything changed in the atmosphere. firefighters have been creative
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with camps and spread out to be more difficult but trying to be safe with the firefighters. >> reporter: thank you so much. they're spreading out the camps so they don't have the firefighters on top of each other and a sense here of a military action to deploy in case the lightening strikes spark more fires. >> paul, thank you so much. those firefighters deserve a lot of praise and cooperative weather at this point. they are exhausted. thank you. here with me now is california secretary of state alex padilla. thank you for joins us. the president finally approved disaster relief. as you watch this major crisis in california, are you satisfied with the federal response so far? >> well, certainly, thankful for the approval of the federal emergency recognition and lets
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our state government headed by governor newsom to work more closely with fema to secure resources, frankly, california taxpayers paying into for many years. these firefighters have been devastated. thank you for acknowledging the tremendous bravery and hard work of all of the firefighters, 14,000 on the front lines and that includes in from out of state under a mutual aid agreement doing the best. want californians to prepare and get through this. >> they're heroes and these wildfires are greatly impacting farmers in the state, as well. they're already struggling due to the pandemic financially. look at the images as we show, i don't know if you can see but the viewers can see. what's being done to help them specifically right now? >> this state, this year's state budget includes augmentation in staffing levels for our cal fire
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plus equipment that is critically needed. this isn't the first year of significant wildfires. we have now the second and third largest wildfire in california history but only because previous records have been set two years ago and just last year. so it's become a little bit of a routine. let's underscore firefighters will agree, climate charnge is real and seeing the impact of it in a wildfire season in california but californians are prepared. it is impacting every sector of the economy including agriculture. it is on top of what we've been dealing given the covid impact on health as well as the economy. so it's realitily testing our resilience but that's what government is here to do, to help. >> you are resilient state and glad you brought up climate change. let me move on to the bigger
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discussion now in the country about the postal service. the president went after california for using mail drop boxes calling it a disaster. it is now been flagged by twitter as a misleading tweet aern about the fifth or sixth now he had from twitter. he questioned whether it was sanitary in light of covid. california's expected to send ballots to 20 million registered voters. how can you guarantee that the president won't get ahead of you? what happens if he sends a misleading tweet earlier in the day? >> yeah. well, clearly trump continues to demonstrate he does not know how elections are administered. vote by mail itself is nothing new in california.
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been around for decades. no excuse. vote by mail allowed millions of voters every election to cast their ballots in the convenience and now from the safety of their own home. we should be looking for more options to cast ballots and protect their health. vote by mail is a central pillar of that and with a little bit of compromised confidence in the postal service and delivery times secure ballot drop boxes are a valuable option for voters. we will maintain vigilance and accountability of the postal service for timely delivery of ballots to voters and back to elections offices but for voters to prefer a drop box they should have confidence they're secure and ballots will be retrieved responsibly, trump's attacks on drop boxes, mail-in ballots are
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baseless, hypocritical and undermines the results he may not like. >> we have to leave it there. our thoughts are with you and your state as you battle the horrendous fires. thank you to you and the firefighters working hard. >> god bless them. from the deep state to the russia hoax, cnn explores the conspiracy theories that defined president trump's time in office. cnn special report "donald trump's conspiracy theories" airs tonight 11:00 eastern right here on cnn. how about no
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hthat cannot be extinguished.s n-n-n-no-no to stir that fire, university of phoenix is awarding up to one million dollars in scholarships through september. see what scholarship you qualify for at phoenix.edu. another day of outrage and protest in eastern europe. demonstrators in bell ruse say the recent vote that re-elect was rigged. cnn's fred pleitgen has more from minsk. >> reporter: despite threats and intimidation, the opposition has managed to bring scores of
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people out here to the streets of minsk, the capital, and many people say of course they're afraid to come out here, afraid that maybe once again the security forces could turn violent but they believe they need to come out now or maybe change won't happen at all. >> that's actually our last chance. really. because if it's -- if we were not free tomorrow we'll never be fr free. >> this nation has never been as united as today. i'm proud for the first time in my life i'm so proud of my people, my country. >> reporter: after an up and down week for the opposition, started off very strong and then towards the end of last week you could feel that long time dictator luke schenn coe to claiming that nato threatening to invade the best of bell ruse and they said it's not true and to bring protests like these to an end very soon.
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people are tired, people want peace and calm he said. we need to give them that. we need to put an end to all this. but as you can see, the people here are not allowing threats from their own president to hold them back. many of them telling us they'll continue to come out here every week until he allows for new elections and steps down. fred write again, cnn, belarus. protesters saying enough is enough. thank you so much. and just ahead, joe biden fires back at president trump for questioning his mental health. you're live in the cnn newsroom. it's the faster way to clean as you go just spray, wipe and rinse it cleans grease five times faster dawn powerwash. spray, wipe, rinse.
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joe biden is revealing his motive behind choosing his running mate. biden tells abc news that he did not feel pressure to select kamala harris just because she was a black woman. listen. >> no, i didn't feel pressure to select a black woman. i cannot understand and fully appreciate what it means to walk in her shoes, to be an african-american woman with an indian-american background. a child of immigrants. we have the same value set and i really mean that. and so it was easy for me. it was an easy decision to make. >> biden is firing back at president trump for questioning his mental health saying biden is too diminished for the job. >> watch me. mr. president, watch me. look at us both. what we say, what we do, what we
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control, what we know, what kind of shape we are in. come on. look. it is a legitimate question to ask anybody over 70 years old whether or not they're fit and ready. but i just -- only thing i can say to the american people is it's a legitimate question to ask anybody. watch me. >> despite his age biden also says he is open to serving not one but two terms if elected. he would be 78 years old if sworn in. one of vladimir putin east most outspoken critics is lying in a hospital bed in germany in a coma. he was transferred to germany yesterday after falling ill on a flight. the trump administration had has very little to say about navalny so far. matthew chance is following the developments. what is the latest on the situation? >> reporter: we haven't had an
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update in 24 hours on alexey navalny. as far as we understand and the latest information is that he is still unconscious on a ventilator to help him breathe. in that clinic in the german capital of berlin. doctors there say that he's in a serious condition but that he is stable. his supporters, though, have expressed optimism that he's evacuated from russia. they had a hard time getting him out. he was coming back on a trip, terrible images, very disturbing of him screaming in agony when the plane touched down to have him evacuated to a hospital there. the russian doctors who examined him said they found absolutely no trace at this stage of poison. that was something that the supporters, the family members said was part of a cover-up and wanted him evacuated out of the country to germany.
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now doctors there are working hard we're told firstly to save his life but also to try to work out why one of russia's most prominent opposition figures felt so sick so suddenly. the allegation is poisoning. but yet to be determined by the medics. >> we wish him a speedy and full recovery. thank you. and still ahead, double dose, a pair of dangerous storms set their sights on the same area of the guflf coast. where watches and warnings are already in place. but i wanted to honor all that she had done to ensure a lasting legacy of education and civic involvement. i'm very proud to carry on her story.
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hi, everyone. thank you so much for joining me. on the eve of the republican national convention, president trump is dealing with an unexpected family scandal. we are hearing new recordings of the president's sister maryanne trump barry unloading on her brother. secretly recorded by the president's niece mary trump, the former federal jujhar dge hy criticized her brother. >> the tweet and the lying, oh my god, you know it is the change of ie
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